IDENTIFYING SUBCLINICAL TRANSTHYRETIN CARDIAC AMYLOIDOSIS IN ASYMPTOMATIC CARRIERS OF THE V122I TTR ALLELE

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R01 · $749,958 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

PROJECT SUMMARY Approximately 1.5 million of the 44 million Blacks in the United States are carriers of the valine-to-isoleucine substitution at position 122 (V122I) in the transthyretin (TTR) protein. Virtually exclusive to Blacks, this is the most common cause of hereditary cardiac amyloidosis (hATTR-CA) worldwide. hATTR-CA leads to worsening heart failure (HF) and premature death. Fortunately, new therapies that stabilize TTR improve morbidity and mortality in hATTR-CA, especially when prescribed early in the disease.(5) However, hATTR-CA is often diagnosed at an advanced stage and conventional diagnostic tools lack diagnostic specificity to detect early disease. Recent work from the author demonstrated that young V122I TTR carriers had indirect imaging and biomarker evidence of cardiac amyloid infiltration. Thus, the overall objectives of this proposal are to determine the presence of subclinical hATTR-CA and to identify biomarkers that indicate amyloid progression in V122I TTR carriers. The central hypothesis of this proposal is that hATTR-CA has a long latency period that will be detected through subclinical amyloidosis imaging and biomarker phenotyping. The central hypothesis will be tested by pursuing 2 specific aims: Aim 1) determine the association of V122I TTR carrier status with CMRI evidence of amyloid infiltration; Sub-aim 1) determine the association of V122I TTR carrier status with cardiac reserve; Aim 2) determine the association between amyloid-specific biomarkers and V122I TTR carrier status; and Sub-aim 2) determine the association of amyloid-specific biomarkers with imaging-based parameters and evaluate their diagnostic utility for identifying subclinical hATTR-CA. In Aim 1, CMRI will be used to compare metrics associated with cardiac amyloid infiltration between a cohort of V122I TTR carriers without HF formed by cascade genetic testing and age-, sex-, and race-matched non-carrier controls. For Sub-Aim 1, a sub-sample of carriers and non- carrier controls enrolled in Aim 1 will undergo novel exercise CMRI to measure and compare cardiac systolic and diastolic reserve. Aim 2 involves measuring and comparing amyloid-specific biomarkers in V122I TTR carriers without HF with samples matched non-carriers (both from Aim 1) and individuals with symptomatic V122I hATTR-CA from our clinical sites. These biomarkers detect and quantify different processes of TTR amyloidogenesis and include circulating TTR, retinol binding protein 4, TTR kinetic stability, and misfolded TTR oligomers. Sub-aim 2 will establish the role of these biomarkers to detect imaging evidence of subclinical hATTR- CA disease. The research proposed in this application is innovative, in the applicant's opinion, because it will enroll a large population of V122I TTR carriers without HF through cascade genetic testing that will model clinical care. Then, it will employ detailed, advanced imaging techniques with tissue characterization and novel biomarkers that directly ...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10520606
Project number
1R01HL160892-01A1
Recipient
UT SOUTHWESTERN MEDICAL CENTER
Principal Investigator
Justin Lee Grodin
Activity code
R01
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2022
Award amount
$749,958
Award type
1
Project period
2022-07-01 → 2027-06-30